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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1949)
Campus Calendar YMFroshClub The YMCA Freshman cluh wil hold a special meeting today at 12 noon in the committee room of the YMCA. German Club Meets The German club will hold a meeting tonight at 7:30 at the men’s lounge in Gerlinger hall. Kwama Meeting Kwama will hold a meeting for its adviser, Golda Wickham, to night at 6:30 at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Refreshments will be served. Luther Bible Study A Bible study will be held by the Lutheran students at Luther house Tuesday afternoon at 4 o’clock. All students who are interested are in vited to attend. Chapel Service Chapel service will be held at Wesley house Wednesday morning from 7:30 to 7:50. Coffee and doughnuts will be served from 7 to 7:30. Chorus to Rehearse The Wesley chorus has been in vited to sing at the Methodist church in Junction City this Sun day. The chorus will rehearse Tuesday evening at 6:30 at Wes ley house. Christian Science Christian Science organization will meet tonight at 7:45 p.m. in the YWCA. All persons connected with the University are invited to attend. Inter-Dorm Council Members of the Inter-Dorm coun cil will meet tonight at the Side at 7:30. Constance Gets NCGP Post C. L. Constance, registrar, was elected vice president of the Ore gon section of the Northwest Coun cil of Guidance and Personnel at the groups annual conference in Portland last week end. Dean Dan Poling of Oregon State college was named president of the Northwest assiciation. The conference included special sections on all phases of high school and college personnel work. Speak ers from the University were Leona E. Tyler, associate professor of psy chology; Paul Eiserer, assistant professor of education and psychol ogy; J. S. Carlson, director of the counseling center, and Robert Clark, assistant to the dean of the college of liberal arts. Eleven Uni versity officials and faculty mem bers attended the conference. YMCA Prepares Table Tennis Meet The YMCA announced that the men entered in the table tennis tournament may check with them for the name of their opponents starting today. It is the responsibil ity of the teams to arrange their play-off date before the 21st of this month. Twenty-five teams have enter ed the tournament from different houses and sixteen single entries have been received. | CLASSIFIED LOST—Pair of dark brown leather gloves Wednesday in room 6 Friendly. Reward. Call John Ev ans, Stan Ray hall, Ext. 381 87 NOTICE—Socks darned, nickel a pair. Call Mom Bruce, 5471. 86 WANTED—Two men to move into private home. Room and board. Good living and study conditions. Joe Cartasegna, 3763, 630 E. 13th 85 LOST—Two brown purses in Mac Court Fri. night. Finder please phone 1309. Important identifi cation. Reward. 86 FOR SALE—’47 Ford Convertible. Cream colored, radio, heater, fog back-up lights, etc. Sporty car, best buy in town for $1695.00. 383 East llth after 5. Harold Hall. 85, 87, 89, 91, (93) LOST—In distress. Please help me find my small Bulova wrist watch. Reward. Call ext. 443. Es ther Kirby. 87 j Records Moved Registration material is now available in Emerald hall for those who did not pick it up in McArthur court Saturday. Adviser certifications and class and department stamps must be secured this week; fees may be paid up until February 26. String Four Plans Concert Thursday The University String Quartet will present a program of three numbers Thursday night at 8:15 p. m. in the School of Music auditori um. Selection included in the program will be the “Beethoven Quartet” Opus 18 No. 1 in F major, “Italian Serenade” by Hugo Wolf, and the “Clarinet Quintet” by Mozart, with John Stehn, associate professor of music, as assisting artist on the clarinet. Wolf is considered to be one of the greatest of leader-com posers and the “Serenade” is the only known instrumental composi tion written under his name. Members of the quartet, now in its second year of existence, are George Bough ton, assistant profes sor of violin, and Mary Kapp Allton, wife of D. W. Allton, assistant pro fessor of organ and theory, violins; Edmund Cykler, associate profes sor of musicology, viola; and Mil ton Dieterich, instructor in cello, violoncello. No admission will be charged for the program. Olivier's Film Hamlet Booked By Mayflower Laurence Oliver’s film version of “Hamlet” will begin a five day en gagement at the Mayflower theater on Monday faternoon, February 21. All seats are reserved for the Shakespearean tragedy, with tick ets going on sale at the theater, Wednesday February 16. The two-and-a-half hour long film will be shown twice daily, at 2:30 and 8:30, with an extra mati nee on Washington's birthday, Feb ruary 22, at 5:30. Special rates for college students will be effective for all matinee and evening performances. Identifica tion at the box-office will be the only requisite for obtaining a 20% discount on all tickets. “Hamlet” was produced and di rected by Oliver, who also performs in the title role. Unlike “Henry V,” Stars in "Hamlet” this cinema version of Shake speare’s greatest play was filmed in black-and-white because, in the words of Oliver: “I see ‘Hamlet’ as an engraving rather than a paint ing.” He has projected this idea in to the film by use of depth-of-focus photography, where all characters on the screen, whether in the back ground or foreground, remain con stantly in the sharpest focus. Assisting Oliver in the $2,000,000 picture, which took eight months to film, are Jean Simmons as Ophel ia, Felix Aylmer as Polonious, and two famed stage personalities from the Old Vic in London: Basil Syd ney as Cladius, and Eileen Herlie as Gertrude. “Hamlet” is shown in this country under the sponsorship of New York's Theater Guild. QUICK SERVICE Right on the Campus Alterations Showerproofing "No Shine" Gabardine Pressing INSTANT PRESSING-/ Oregon Poet to Speak In Browsing Room Verne Bright, Oregon poet, will attend the Ethel R. Sawyer brows ing room hour this afternoon at 4 p.m. After a lecture on his poem "Mountain Men” by R. V. Mill, assistant professor of English, Bright will read selections from his work and comment upon the lecture. The Northwest author was graduated from Pacific university in 1925, and took graduate work in writing at the University of Oregon a/ few years later. He has worked on newspapers as reporter and editor. While doing this, he managed to continue his outside writing, and has had over twelve-hundred poems published in the United States and foreign countries. Bright spent three years of intensive research on "Mountain Men,”* reading and studying over three-hundred books on history, Americana, i and biography to obtain the background material. ■ This will be the fifth in this term’s series of browsing room hours. The program has been devoted mainly of lectures on contemporary lit erature, said Miss Bernice Rise, head of circulation and readers’ con-* sultant. They will depart from the usual procedure next Tuesday, and ■ present two one-act plays by the drama department. Peterson Chosen Faculty Club Head Dr. T. S. Peterson, associate pro fessor of mathematics, was elected president of the Faculty club in its recent election. Hugh Smith, assist ant professor of law, was chosen vice-president, while George Belk ner, University editor, and J. O. Lindstrom, business'manager, were re-elected secretary and treasurer respectively. Elected to the board of directors were Dr. R. T. Ellickson, associate dean of the graduate school, Dr. Chandler Beall, professor of roman ce language, and Col. R. M. Lyon. SOAP for every need UNIVERSITY GROCERY 790 E. 11th - Ph. 159 BOMB? Zt#*ec~s /«•>+■ TIFFANY DAVIS 8th at Willamette